
In this concise yet thorough survey, a seasoned French educator guides listeners through the whirlwind of discoveries that have reshaped physics over the past decade. By focusing on the experiments that earned the most confidence, the narrative traces how ideas about matter, electricity, light and ionization have gradually evolved, presenting each breakthrough as a step in a larger story rather than an isolated curiosity.
The author deliberately sidesteps heavy mathematics, opting instead for clear explanations that require no prior knowledge of advanced treatises. While the book touches on the interplay between electricity and optics and outlines the emerging electronic hypothesis, it leaves detailed engineering applications and lingering mysteries for future exploration. Listeners will come away with a solid grasp of how modern physics emerged from its classical roots and an appreciation for the ongoing quest to refine its foundational principles.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (455K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1862–1920
A French physicist who moved easily between science and public service, he helped shape education in France at the highest level during the early 20th century. His career joined laboratory learning, university leadership, and a strong belief in making science more widely understood.
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